The Weekly Tribune has been for a third of a century the favorite paper for our substantial country population. It has recently been enlarged and greatly improved by a change of form. Each issue consists of sixteen pages, of the form and general appearance of Harper’s Weekly, but with pages considerably larger, and with unusually large and clear type. It preserves all the old and standard features, including a singularly varied and excellent Agricultural Department, while it offers, among other novel and special attractions, a graphic series of articles on Domestic Life and Habits Abroad, by Bayard Taylor; a few papers on Current Topics from the Christian Minister’s Point of View, by the Rev. John Hall, D. D.; occasional contributions on Political Problems and Promises, by Gail Hamilton; A Northern Farmer on Southern Agriculture, by Solon Robinson, and Life and Sights in New York, by Veterans of the City Staff.
The Semi-Weekly Tribune combines many of the merits of both the other issues, and is in some respects the best as well as the cheapest paper issued from The Tribune office. It has also been enlarged and changed to the new 16-page form.
TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE
Postage Free in the United States.
| Daily Tribune: | |
| One year | $10.00 |
| Semi-Weekly Tribune: | |
| One year | 3.00 |
| Five Copies, one year | 14.00 |
| Eleven Copies, one year | 28.00 |
| Weekly Tribune: | |
| One Copy, one year | 2.00 |
| Five Copies, one year | 8.25 |
| Ten Copies, one year | 14.00 |
| Twenty Copies, one year | 25.00 |
Any number of copies above 20 at the same rate. Additions to Clubs may be made at any time. Remit by P. O. Order or in Registered Letter.
UNEXAMPLED PREMIUM!
Webster’s $12 Unabridged Dictionary Free.
The Tribune makes an extraordinary offer. It will give The Weekly for five years, post paid, and a copy of the great standard Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary (latest and best edition), in leather binding, 1,840 quarto pages, with 3,000 engravings, both for $10—being two dollars less than the cost of the Dictionary alone at any book-store! Thus any subscriber, renewing at the regular rate for five years, gets his favorite paper for the five years for nothing and the great Dictionary for $2 less than its regular price; or he gets his paper at the regular price, and the great Dictionary for nothing—whichever way he pleases to count it. Any old subscriber to The Semi-weekly Tribune can avail himself of the same offer by sending the regular price of that issue for five years’ subscriptions—$15—in the same way. The papers are sent in all cases free of postage; the Dictionary, being too heavy to go in the mails, is forwarded at once in whatever way the subscriber asks, at his expense. For further information and specimen copies, address simply THE TRIBUNE, New York.